"Two years after releasing the revered noise/dance record Health//Disco, Health return to the remix realm with Disco2, morphing 2009's Get Color into an electronic masterpiece. Curated and produced by Health, Disco2 features the epic noise jams of Get Color remixed by electronic luminaries Tobacco, Crystal Castles, Salem, Javelin, and Gold Panda (among others), and leads off with the killer new Health single 'USA Boys,' mixed by legendary producer Alan Moulder (My Bloody Valentine, Nine Inch Nails, Depeche Mode). Health have turned the dancefloor filthy again. It's going to be a noisy summer."

"In their five years of existence, Child Abuse have become much more than a (shocking) name. The legendary NY trio has fused elements of noise, death metal, free jazz, and grind (among other things) for something entirely their own. On their 2nd full-length and 3rd Lovepump release, Child Abuse has reached the apex of weird: Cut And Run is a monument of bizarre brutality."

"Get Color is the highly-anticipated second album from Los Angeles noise-wonders Health. After two solid years touring with the likes of Nine Inch Nails, Of Montreal, Crystal Castles, etc., and releasing their much-loved self-titled debut and bangin' Health//Disco remix record, the band convened in in an especially gnarly part of Lincoln Heights, L.A to record Get Color. The record is an exuberant proclamation of noise, rock and electronic splendor. It's a celebration of sound; pretty, harsh, soft and basked in a blanket of ethereal vocals. Get Color is the manifesto Health have been promising since their inception. Health are the band. Get Color is the record."

"Grimy synths, broken beats, and bucolic vocals collide somewhere between early '90s house music and the gnarly soundscapes of Black Dice to forge a sound that's wholly unique and endlessly exciting. It's exceedingly rare to find dance music that transcends the cold and robotic, but on Dark Rift Pictureplane does just that: churning out intricate electronic jams out of his Denver bedroom. It feels at once personal and cosmically expansive. In Pictureplane's own words: 'once every 26,000 years our planet crosses through the elliptical plane at the center of our galaxy known as the dark rift. The songs on Dark Rift lyrically deal with humanity entering a new age or next phase of our existence.' The dance-floor and universe await Dark Rift."